Publication | Open Access
Assessing the Case for Social Experiments
945
Citations
18
References
1995
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingSocial PsychologyField ExperimentEducationSocial InfluenceResearch EvaluationQuasi-experimentSocial SciencesProgram EvaluationBiasExperimental EconomicsSocial ExperimentsPublic PolicyBehavioral SciencesSocial ProgramsSocial ImpactApplied Social PsychologyBehavioral EconomicsExperimental MethodSocial BehaviorExperiment DesignQuantitative Social Science Research
This paper analyzes the method of social experiments. The assumptions that justify the experimental method are exposited. Parameters of interest in evaluating social programs are discussed. The authors show how experiments sometimes serve as instrumental variables to identify program impacts. The most favorable case for experiments ignores variability across persons in response to treatments received and assumes that mean impacts of a program are the main object of interest in conducting an evaluation. Experiments do not identify the distribution of program gains unless additional assumptions are maintained. Evidence on the validity of the assumptions used to justify social experiments is presented.
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